One round of .50 caliber ammunition is 0.93 inches center-to-center, so nine yards works out to 302 rounds. The belts on the P-38 and the B-29 were up to 500 rounds. The Mustang was up to 400. The Spitfire was 350 rpg, but that was smaller ammunition. No one measured belt length in terms of yards, so this whole story is quite unlikely.
This is a real brain tester. I do Know the origins of several other phrases, such as "The Whole Nine Yards" referring to the 9 yds of fabric used for the Scottish great kilt. ***CORRECTION*** TO "THE WHOLE NINE YARDS" No suits, kilts or wedding veils here. (The Scottish did not use yards as a measurement!) This answer came straight from several WWII vets. In WWII, gunners in aircraft (tail gunners, belly gunners, etc) had limited space and weight available for ammunition. The length of a machine-gun bullet chain for these aircraft, when stretched out, measured 27 feet in length. So when the gunner "let him have it" he gave the enemy the "whole 9 yards." But I believe I just may have a starting point. In the latter part of the 1800's, est around 1860, Winchester was advertising its ammunition as The Most Accurate "Right Out of The Box".
concrete is measured by the yard, and a concrete truck filled to the top of spout will hold nine yards, so a full truck of concrete is the whole nine yards.
The abbreviation for both yard and yards is "yd".
Yard as in the unit of distance would be Cadlas (Northern) or Iard (Southern) Or yards as in school yard would be Llathen.
You may mean a unit of measurement equal to to 5.5 yards. Or a unit of square measurement equal to 30.25 square yards
The origin of the phrase "the whole nine yards" is still unknown. It is has been described as "the most prominent etymological riddle of our time."
you might want to specify in what state you are referring to in Texas its 20 rounds at 3 yards 20 rounds at 7 yards 10 rounds at 15 yards
8,286 yards rounds to 4.7 miles.
100 meters rounds to 109.4 yards.
100 centimeters rounds to 1.1 yards.
236 centimeters rounds to 2.6 yards.
100 meters rounds to 109.4 yards.
This is a real brain tester. I do Know the origins of several other phrases, such as "The Whole Nine Yards" referring to the 9 yds of fabric used for the Scottish great kilt. ***CORRECTION*** TO "THE WHOLE NINE YARDS" No suits, kilts or wedding veils here. (The Scottish did not use yards as a measurement!) This answer came straight from several WWII vets. In WWII, gunners in aircraft (tail gunners, belly gunners, etc) had limited space and weight available for ammunition. The length of a machine-gun bullet chain for these aircraft, when stretched out, measured 27 feet in length. So when the gunner "let him have it" he gave the enemy the "whole 9 yards." But I believe I just may have a starting point. In the latter part of the 1800's, est around 1860, Winchester was advertising its ammunition as The Most Accurate "Right Out of The Box".
The whole nine yards means "the complete list" or "the full amount".Ammo referenceThe whole nine yards refers to the fact that warplanes used to carry 27 feet of ammunition as a basic load. It is a pilot term "I gave him the whole 9 yards" referring to the fact that they unloaded everything they had on a target. It is also a movie about a hitman with Bruce Willis in it. Concrete referenceMost cement trucks -- properly called concrete trucks -- contain nine yards -- actually cubic yards -- of concrete. If you delivered the "whole nine yards," you delivered the entire load. So, the term is synonymous with "everything
The director of The Whole Nine Yards was Jonathan Lynn.
Vernon Kay presents "the whole 19 yards"
The duration of The Whole Ten Yards is 1.63 hours.